• Something wrong with this record ?

Assisted Jumping in Healthy Older Adults: Optimizing High-Velocity Training Prescription

JJ. Tufano, T. Vetrovsky, P. Stastny, M. Steffl, J. Malecek, D. Omcirk

. 2022 ; 36 (6) : 1518-1523. [pub] 20200707

Language English Country United States

Document type Journal Article

ABSTRACT: Tufano, JJ, Vetrovsky, T, Stastny, P, Steffl, M, Malecek, J, and Omcirk, D. Assisted jumping in healthy older adults: optimizing high-velocity training prescription. J Strength Cond Res 36(6): 1518-1523, 2022-Because older adults benefit from power training, training strategies for athletes such as supramaximal velocity-assisted jumping could also be useful for older adults. However, optimizing-assisted exercise prescription in older adults remains uninvestigated. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the effects of different bodyweight (BW) assistance levels on jumping force and velocity in healthy older adults. Twenty-three healthy older adults (67.6 ± 7.6 years, 167.0 ± 8.8 cm, 72.7 ± 14.3 kg, and 27.1 ± 6.9% body fat) performed 5 individual countermovement jumps at BW, 90, 80, 70, and 60% of BW. Jumps were performed on a force plate, which provided peak take-off force (TOF), flight time, and peak impact force. A linear position transducer measured peak concentric velocity (PV). The rating of perceived exertion (RPE) was also assessed after each condition. Take-off force was greater during BW than all other conditions, 90 and 80% were greater than 70 and 60%, but there were no differences between 80 and 90% or between 70 and 60%. The FT progressively increased at all assistance levels, and PV was faster for all assistance levels than BW, with no differences between assistance levels. Impact force was greater during BW than 80, 70, and 60% and was greater during 90% than 60%. The RPE was less than BW during all assistance conditions but was the least during 70%. Implementing assisted jumping between 70 and 80% of BW in older adults likely provides the ideal combination of force, velocity, and RPE.

References provided by Crossref.org

000      
00000naa a2200000 a 4500
001      
bmc22018216
003      
CZ-PrNML
005      
20220804134628.0
007      
ta
008      
220720s2022 xxu f 000 0|eng||
009      
AR
024    7_
$a 10.1519/JSC.0000000000003661 $2 doi
035    __
$a (PubMed)32639371
040    __
$a ABA008 $b cze $d ABA008 $e AACR2
041    0_
$a eng
044    __
$a xxu
100    1_
$a Tufano, James J $u Faculty of Physical Education and Sport, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic
245    10
$a Assisted Jumping in Healthy Older Adults: Optimizing High-Velocity Training Prescription / $c JJ. Tufano, T. Vetrovsky, P. Stastny, M. Steffl, J. Malecek, D. Omcirk
520    9_
$a ABSTRACT: Tufano, JJ, Vetrovsky, T, Stastny, P, Steffl, M, Malecek, J, and Omcirk, D. Assisted jumping in healthy older adults: optimizing high-velocity training prescription. J Strength Cond Res 36(6): 1518-1523, 2022-Because older adults benefit from power training, training strategies for athletes such as supramaximal velocity-assisted jumping could also be useful for older adults. However, optimizing-assisted exercise prescription in older adults remains uninvestigated. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to determine the effects of different bodyweight (BW) assistance levels on jumping force and velocity in healthy older adults. Twenty-three healthy older adults (67.6 ± 7.6 years, 167.0 ± 8.8 cm, 72.7 ± 14.3 kg, and 27.1 ± 6.9% body fat) performed 5 individual countermovement jumps at BW, 90, 80, 70, and 60% of BW. Jumps were performed on a force plate, which provided peak take-off force (TOF), flight time, and peak impact force. A linear position transducer measured peak concentric velocity (PV). The rating of perceived exertion (RPE) was also assessed after each condition. Take-off force was greater during BW than all other conditions, 90 and 80% were greater than 70 and 60%, but there were no differences between 80 and 90% or between 70 and 60%. The FT progressively increased at all assistance levels, and PV was faster for all assistance levels than BW, with no differences between assistance levels. Impact force was greater during BW than 80, 70, and 60% and was greater during 90% than 60%. The RPE was less than BW during all assistance conditions but was the least during 70%. Implementing assisted jumping between 70 and 80% of BW in older adults likely provides the ideal combination of force, velocity, and RPE.
650    _2
$a senioři $7 D000368
650    12
$a sportovci $7 D056352
650    _2
$a tělesná hmotnost $7 D001835
650    _2
$a zdravotní stav $7 D006304
650    _2
$a lidé $7 D006801
650    12
$a svalová síla $7 D053580
650    _2
$a lékařské předpisy $7 D055656
655    _2
$a časopisecké články $7 D016428
700    1_
$a Vetrovsky, Tomas
700    1_
$a Stastny, Petr
700    1_
$a Steffl, Michal
700    1_
$a Malecek, Jan
700    1_
$a Omcirk, Dan
773    0_
$w MED00008742 $t Journal of strength and conditioning research $x 1533-4287 $g Roč. 36, č. 6 (2022), s. 1518-1523
856    41
$u https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32639371 $y Pubmed
910    __
$a ABA008 $b sig $c sign $y p $z 0
990    __
$a 20220720 $b ABA008
991    __
$a 20220804134622 $b ABA008
999    __
$a ok $b bmc $g 1822015 $s 1169459
BAS    __
$a 3
BAS    __
$a PreBMC
BMC    __
$a 2022 $b 36 $c 6 $d 1518-1523 $e 20200707 $i 1533-4287 $m Journal of strength and conditioning research $n J Strength Cond Res $x MED00008742
LZP    __
$a Pubmed-20220720

Find record

Citation metrics

Loading data ...

Archiving options

Loading data ...